Journal Pioneer

HELP PLANNED FOR INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIE­S WITHOUT BUSES

Feds say help will come for remote, Indigenous communitie­s without buses

- BY TERRY PEDWELL

Canadians left isolated by the shutdown of Greyhound services in western Canada and northern Ontario will have to wait two years for potential permanent replacemen­ts of the buses they’ve depended on, the federal government revealed Wednesday as it offered to help temporaril­y fill service gaps.

As Greyhound was making its final runs on routes it deemed unsustaina­ble, federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau announced that the Trudeau government is open to helping affected provinces pay for bus service in communitie­s where other companies have not taken over.

As well, Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott said her department will subsidize bus services to remote Indigenous communitie­s where needed. The announceme­nts leave many commuters “stranded” with no informatio­n or details on how they will get around, the Amalgamate­d Transit Union complained.

“For decades, Greyhound was the critical link connecting ... small town and isolated First Nations communitie­s with bigger urban centres, ensuring their safety, health and security,” ATU Canada president John Di Nino said in a statement. “Many can’t afford cars, and other transporta­tion options are limited.” Greyhound announced in July that it would end service on all but one of its routes in western Canada, and in northern Ontario, effective Oct. 31.

Since then, several regional companies have come forward to offer bus services, taking over 87 per cent of the abandoned Greyhound routes, Garneau said. Some of those companies have already begun operations while others are set to roll in the new few weeks, he said.

For the 13 per cent left without service, Ottawa will work with the provinces to come up with alternativ­es, Garneau pledged. “The government of Canada is prepared to assist affected provinces in determinin­g the best path forward and is open to considerin­g avenues towards finding effective solutions,” he told an Ottawa news conference.

The government will also financiall­y support start-up transporta­tion companies in Indigenous communitie­s through business developmen­t programs already in place, said Philpott.

“The federal government will be engaging with Indigenous communitie­s to support those impacted by bus service cancellati­on, as well as supporting community-led solutions including new economic opportunit­ies such as Indigenous-owned transporta­tion businesses,” she announced. But a more permanent groundtran­sportation structure is needed nationwide, and Ottawa will work with the provinces and territorie­s over the next two years to find a better, longer-lasting solution, Garneau said.

A working group will develop a “long-term plan to address mobility issues across the entire country, not just the West,” the minister said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The Greyhound logo is seen on one of the company’s buses, in Vancouver, on Monday July 9, 2018. The federal government says it will step in to support the transporta­tion needs of some northern and remote communitie­s affected by the closure of Greyhound bus operations in western Canada and northern Ontario.
CP PHOTO The Greyhound logo is seen on one of the company’s buses, in Vancouver, on Monday July 9, 2018. The federal government says it will step in to support the transporta­tion needs of some northern and remote communitie­s affected by the closure of Greyhound bus operations in western Canada and northern Ontario.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada